Weight transfer

How Weight Transfer Affects Ball Flight and Scoring

Connect pressure shift to contact, curve, distance, and playable misses.

How Weight Transfer Affects Ball Flight and Scoring illustration

Contact tells the story

When pressure stays back, the low point often falls behind the ball. That can mean fat irons, thin irons, or a flip that adds loft and weakens flight. When the shift lunges too far forward, the path and face can change quickly, producing pulls, slices, or contact on the toe.

Ball-flight clues

  • High weak shots: trail-side hang-back and added loft.
  • Heavy irons: low point behind the ball.
  • Thin bullets: early lift or flip to save contact.
  • Pulls: upper body outracing the lower body.

Scoring impact

Solid pressure shift gives predictable carry distances. Poor transfer makes club selection feel impossible because a 7-iron can fly three different yardages depending on contact.

Contact pattern Likely transfer issue Scorecard effect
Fat approach Low point too far back Short misses and bunkers
Thin wedge Hanging back, flipping Long misses over greens
Weak driver No lead-side post Lost distance
Off-balance finish Poor sequencing Bigger dispersion

Reliable scoring starts with knowing where the ground contact will be.